I'm over at SheLoves today, sharing about how a Muslim girl came to live with us and became a part of our family...

My three-year-old son tightly twisted the long strand of strong black
hair round and round his fingers as he emerged from the guest room
yesterday. I peeked through the bedroom door and found my one-year-old
daughter squatting on the floor, peering into a fish tank at the
“fiffy”—a silky black Betta fish that fluttered to the surface of the
bowl. Next to her, Shirin, a 26-year-old Saudi Arabian girl, sat
cross-legged taking videos of my daughter that will no doubt make her
famous on Snapchat in Saudi Arabia. I smiled silently at the scene, reflecting on the treasure of an unexpected relationship.

***

Three years ago, living back in Chicago after spending several years
abroad, I was hungry for relationships with anyone who wasn’t a white
American. Though I felt limited by my new mommy status, I volunteered to
help ESL students at a nearby university practice their English on the
condition that I could bring my eight-month-old son. Desperate for
native speakers for students to practice with, the teacher agreed and
invited me to her class of Saudi Arabians.

The class was made up of six women and four men who were forced to
practice English together despite the fact that in conservative Islamic
Saudi Arabia, men and women aren’t even allowed to attend mixed-gender
classes. Most of the women wore traditional Saudi clothing—headscarves
called hijabs and black, lightweight cloaks called abayas.
They were painfully shy, though the presence of a baby magically
cracked their solemn demeanor. After the third week volunteering, the
teacher of the class whispered that there was something she needed to
talk to me about after class.

Scooping up my son who had spent the class crawling under feet,
skirts and chair legs, I handed him my keys to play with as I curiously
sat down with the teacher.

“So,” she started. “Do you know Shirin from class?” I nodded. “Well,”
she continued, “she wanted me to ask you if she could live with you for
three months. She’ll pay you rent,” she added.Surprised, I told her that I wasn’t sure, but I’d talk to my husband.

Though this was something that excited me, I was pretty sure my more
level-headed husband would simply shake his head with that smirk on his
face that says, “I love you for being so different, honey—but you’re
kind of crazy.”

Instead, he leaned back against the kitchen counter, smiled, and
shocked me by saying, “There’s really no reason we shouldn’t have her.”Shirin moved in with us at the end of the summer and three months turned into ten...